PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
'April 80. IMS
NIPPONS HINT
DFAUSTRAL1AN
I1S1SC1
(Continued From Page One)
but U. S. troops continued mop
ping up stragglers who hid in
the junglematted hills.
The navy did not say whether
the enemy group were stragglers
or a military patrol put ashore
perhaps to scout American de
fenses .as a prelude to a new
Japanese offensive.
Fliers Blast
A navy . communique said
American fliers blasted enemy
positions in widespread attacks
through the Solomon Archipel
ago, raiding Kahili in the Short
lands, Kolombangari and Munda.
Allied warplanes, breaking
through a strong screen of Jap
anese Zero fighters, violently at
tacked Japanese barracks, han
gars and seaplanes at the former
Dutch naval base of Amboina
600 miles north of Australia,
Gen. Douglas MacArthur's head
quarters said today.
Three of 15 Japanese Inter
ceptors were shot down or dam
aged, a communique -said, and
the entire formation of U. S.
Liberators returned safely.
Timor Hit
Coupled with this attack,
Dutch-manned Mitchells set fires
at Koepang, capital of Dutch
Timor. Other allied planes
struck at the Tanimbar islands
and New Guinea. "
On the Burma front, British
headquarters reported that sharp
local fighting erupted along the
Bay of Bengal coast, with alter
nate attacks and counterattacks
by Japanese and British troops,,
but the situation as a whole re
mained unchanged. i
RAF warplanes bombed and
atrafed Japanese troops, attacked
villages around tne oig enemy
base at Akyab, and hit rail lines,
river steamers and other targets.
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
BETTER 0& gives you more
-heat per coupon. Buy otana
ard Burner Oils. Peyton &
Co. 4-3"
FOR THE BETTER grades of
fuel oils, accurate, metered de
liveries, try Fred H. Heilbron
ner, 821 Spring street, tele
phone 4153. Distributor Shell
Heating Oils. 4-a u
GIRL WANTED during summer
months for light housework.
24 Main. ;-. . . 5-3
CLEANS modern 2 bedroom
house gas range, heater, floor
coverings, : garage. Adults.
$27.50: 2310 Orchard. Phone
4376. 4 : 5-3
IMPORTED Scotch Glencaron
woolens are again available
also fine tropical all wool
suitings for ladies' suits in all
the newest shades. See them
at Orres Tailor Shop, 129
South 7th. ' 4-30
FOR ALTERING, Repairing, Re
. lining. Cleaning, Buttonholes,
try Orres Tailor Shop. 4-30
FOR SALE The cleanest 1936
Ford Tudor in town. Phone
3527. See at 1525 Division
No dealers please. . 5-1
ONE 1940 Chev. Pickup for
rent. Call 6095 after 6 o'
clock. 5-5
FOR SALE by owner, close in,
. modern . 5 - room furnished
house, plastered, concrete
foundation, large front and
rear porch, stationary tubs,
4 cabins in rear all furnished,
garage and woodshed. Terms.
, Phone 6744 or 'call at 412
Michigan. . 5-3
FOR SALE 1 power take off
for Fordson tractor, $15.00.
5102 So. 6th St. 5-2
8-ROOM HOUSE Call 6676 be
fore 4 or 6501 after. 3909tf
FOR SALE Latest DeLuxe
model 8.5 cu. ft. Coldspot re
frigerator, $150' cash. 708
N. 9th. 4-30
8-ROOM furnished house, bath
and garage.. 2504 Pershing
way. 3987U
INEW TODAYS
Wdfng: Through
CHARLIS -j0
1TARMTT 4
oo. (y
III i. Itfl 41
10 TjrM
Open at
Hill ' 1:30-6:43
liMiHil11!!
Potatoes
SAN FRANCISCO, April 30
(AP-USDA) Potatoes: 1 Idaho
arrived by rail, 1 unbroken car
on track; by truck 6 California,
1 Oregon arrived; no sales re
ported. LOS ANGELES, April 30 (AP
USDA) Potatoes: 1 Idaho ar
rived by rail, 4 unbroken, 2
broken cars on track; by truck
4? California arrived; no sales
reported.
CHICAGO, April 30 W) Po
tatoes, arrivals 36; on track 27;
total US shipments 254; new
stock: supplies very light, de
mand good; market firm at ceil
ing; old stock; no track sales re
ported; California Long White
US No. 1, 100 weight $4.74;
Texas 50-lb. sack Bliss Triumphs
victory grade $3.00.
AMERICANS SMASH
(Continued From Page One)
road to Mateur. Fields and
roads about green and bald hills
there were found sown with
hundreds of mines and booby
traps.
A military spokesman said the
American forces launched an at
tack four miles east of Sidi N'Sir
against German gun emplace
ments on hill 601 Djebel
Tahent which dominates the
valley extending 16 miles north
eastward to the Mateur road
junction, but met strong resist
ance and failed to reach the sum
mit. Counter Attacks
Nazi troops counterattacked
repeatedly against U. S. lines
south of the hill, but all the
thrusts were repelled.
Gen. Sir Bernard Montgom
ery's eighth army mounted a
local attack on the southern
front and gained its objective,
the communique announced,
adding that "an enemy counter
attack in this sector achieved
slight success."
German tanks and infantry
struck heavily again at first
army lines in the Medjez-el-Sector,
but the communique said
that, with the exception of one
small gain by the enemy in the
Medjerda river area, all attacks
"were repulsed with heavy loss
to the enemy and our forward
positions were maintained.
Dance , Set Eagles auxiliary
and drum corps will hold a Sat
urday night dance at the KC
hall. Estin Kiger's orchestra
will play. The public is invited.
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
LOST Gas ration book belong
ing to A. P. Jacobsen, 1907
Derby. 5-3
FOR SALE 2-piece used daven
port set; steel folding . bed;
small desk table; also Baldwin
piano in excellent condition.
. special cash price $150. 534
Pacific Terrace. 5-1
FOR SALE? Equity in 2 acres
and modern 4-room house,
; Shady Pine. Rt. 3, Box 1147.
5-3
WANTED Beauty operator.
Guaranteed salary. Louise
Beauty Service, 435 Main. Ph.
8260. 5-6
FOR RENT Nicely furnished
3-room modern apartment.
Hardwood floors, gas range
and heat, 5 blocks from Main.
Adults, no pets. Rent $35.
625 No. 8th or phone 3727.
4-30
SERVICE STATION operator,
$150 month and commissions.
News-Herald Box 3628. 5-3
FOR SALE Practically new
Bendix washer, $180 cash.
News-Herald Box 3898. 5-3
LOST Ration book 2. Lyle
Fridley, 329 Lincoln. 5-2
ROOM AND BOARD
Main.
1841
5-3
HI I 4 J Jj
NEW today;
ACTION
HITS
ITS JUNGLE lOVEIf
ml
i 2
X 2nd Hit f
Adventure In the
t Oil Fields
AtUNI JUDOI JH
fBuy Your Next $
Bond Today
i
IWQRKERSASK b
AGREEMENT,
BARGAINING
(Continued From Page One)
pute is certified to the WLB,
there is nothing to prevent the
parties from continuing negotia
tions voluntarily without gov
ernment participation.
Also, it was pointed out, the
WLB sometimes "uncertifies"
cases, returning them to the con
ciliation service when panel
hearings develop that successful
bargaining still is possible. How
ever, even a negotiated wage
agreement has to go to the WLB
under the wage stabilization pro
gram. John L. Lewis, UMW presi
dent, made public the reply after
a session of the international
policy committee of the union.
Lewis handed newsmen the text
of the committee's message to
the president without comment,
and declined to answer ques
tions. Voluntary Stoppage
Several union district presi
dents who are members of the
policy committee and who were
interviewed after the meeting
said the telegram meant that in
the absence of an agreement
there would be a voluntary stop
page of work in the mines at
midnight tonight when the
president-extended contract ex
pires. Any walkout would affect ap
proximately 450,000 soft coal
miners in the Appalachian joint
conference. The UMW always
has taken the position that they
never work without a contract.
and Lewis has said during the
wage negotiations which began
early last month that in the ab
sence of an agreement the
miners would not trespass on
mine property.
WLB Told
The message said in part that
the war labor board "would and
could not do other than to apply
its fixed mathematical measur
ing device to the existing wage
structure of the bituminous coal
industry, and deny our every re
quest."
"We maintain," the message
asserted, "that such a conclusive
action conceivably would not be
a, decision , based upon the
equities of the miners' case. Ad.
mittedly it is in contravention of
the very principles of equity and
justice upon which American
justice is predicated and which
makes of our courts the great
free institutions they are.
"It turns a deaf ear to the
pleas of a half-million of Amer
ica's finest industrial soldiers,
and their several million de
pendent wives and children who
daily find their living standards
being lowered to the point of
despair by mounting prices of
foodstuffs and the essentials of
life."
SPRINGFIELD, 111., April 30
(IP) There will be no strike by
Progressive Mine Workers of
America, the union's policy con
vention decided here this after
noon, voting to continue con
tract negotiations with opera
tors for 30 days. The union, an
AFL affiliate, claims, to repre
sent 21,000 miners in Illinois
and Kentucky.
SEATTLE, April 30 (7P)
Washington state's 2450 soft
coal miners will cease work at
midnight if no agreement is
reached in the Appalachian soft
coal industry dispute, Richard
Francis, district secretary-treasurer
for the United Mine Work
ers, announced today.
'The district is not calling a
strike," he said, "but the miners
MWMWWRWI i
Give
Their Lives .
l
New Today
I t FIRST-RUN I
FEATURES
'""V Geo. Sanders
IYNNI
M E R F ""WWQfer
We Lend Our Money.
Japanese Fight Raid Fire
A
This picture, appearing In an
...ti jt, u. r-..iA
Japanese newspaper YomlurL is described at showing fire fighters
at work after the U. S. army air raid of April 18. Photo li from a
copy of Yomiuri obtained recently by the American magaiina
Newsweek, which said it had been smuggled out of Japan.
Izvestia Predicts
Intensive Soviet
Summer Campaign
(Continued From Page One)
lent on action In that area. The
Russians generally have omitted
mention of .campaigns until they
were under way for some time.
Hold Bridgehead
(The Germans hold a narrow
bridgehead on the Black Sea
coast and in the Taman penln-
are fed up and there Is no hold
ing them." ! i-
The district headquarters, at
Renton near here, has agree
ments with operators of 60
Washington mines.
o NEW TODAY
D
See ft From
o
o
o
To insure your complete enjoyment of a terrific
climax no patron will be seated durlnq the last
1$ minutes of the picture!
Please!
. . . After you have seen It please do not di
vulge the plot to others who may be planning to
attend!
V ' ' " DDII I I It II T
. STAR AND THE
; MASTER STORYTELLER
f ' nuiTiun tul id eat it
...UNITING THEIR GREAT
t, ...uniting nikin until .
I , TALENTS IN THE MASTERPIECE
- '9F MYSTERY-ROMANCE. .!
I' What horror did her wcret' '
life hold . , . that rtiade her
:' dreed1 HiUmon of her eVeem?
Hi
Shadow
W f
April 19, 1942, edition of the
sula across Kerch strait from the
Crimea).
The Germans were rported to
be moving up reinforcements,
munitions and supplies in all
sectors, but nazl train and truck
communications were being
struck heavy blows by the red
airmen, and in places where Rus
sian artillery could lay down
their shells the big guns were
pounding the German concentra
tions, it was said.
The destruction of 77 German
planes in two days, west of
Krasnodar in the Kuban valley,
gives some insight into the ter
rific air war.
An Ohio boy was born with
four teeth. That's starting life's
grind rather early.
Beginning !
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TERESA WRIGHT
STAR OP "MRS. MIHIVIR" AND
"PRIDE OP THE YANKEES"
JOSEPH CQTTEfl
MACDONALD CAREY
IN
Alfred HITCHCOCKS
of a Doubt
Pfilur it
till) Mi Him Tl '"
Extra! Donald Duck
' In
' uonaio s
Tire Trouble"
Jjehfl NhMI Short
LiimI Wir
N.wl 0ovrK
T
E
SEATTLE. April 30 T The
office of price administration
has authorized western Oregon
and western Washington con
tract loggers who operate 48
hours week to make the name
maximum prlco increases which
sellers of west const logs have
been permitted to muko since
last September for production
undor overtime conditions.
Tho effoct of the order, Dr.
James K. Hull, stato OPA price
officer expluincd, Is to allow the
sellers of logs to pass on the ad
ditional receipts to the contract
loggers who actually Incurred
the overtime expense
The specific additions to price
ceilings are $1.00 per thousand
feet under a 48-hour schedule;
$1.50 if produced under 54-hour
operations, and $2.00 for 60-hour
work-week conditions.
Martinique Consul
Called Home, All
Agreements Revoked
(Continued From Page One)
effectively stripped under an
agreement with the United
States, howevor, that oven if he
wished, Robert could not put
them into service against the
United Nations.
Food shipments from the
United States to the island,
famed in history as the birth
place of Napoleon's Empress
Josephine, were halted Novem
ber 8. The conclusion drawn at
the time this was announced, In
March, was that the United
States was weary of Robert's at
tltude and. ho could get his
groceries elsewhere.
"It is a matter nf mmmnn
knowledge," the note said, "that
me icrriiory pi metropolitan
France, contrary to tlm ulh nf
the French people, Is being used
In an ever lnrrialn0 Hi,nr. t
active military operations against
mo unnca states and that the
vichy regime is now an Integral
part of the nazl system.
"The ffnvrntnftnt nf h Unit
ed States docs not recognize
vlchy nor will it recognize or ne
gotiate with any French repre
HURRY! . .
It Must Leave
Saturday
Doeri Open l:30-6i4S
News
Events
L
OGGERS GE
OKAY TO
BOOST PRIG
THIS "HALL OF FAME" PICTURE WILL
WIN A LASTING PLAGE AMONG YOUR
TREASURED SCREEN MEMORIES
m3
ft $r
P -'
RONALD COLMAN GREER GARSON
JAMES HILTON'S
RANDOM HARVEST
Mntiii h MERVYN UROY freW SIDNEY FRANKLIN
witk PHILIP DORN SUSAN PETERS
HENRY TRAVERS REGINALD OWEN
BRAM WELL FLETCHER
8erea Plsy ay Osadlae West, Geor( Froestbel aad Anhor Wlmperll
Bswd Upea the Nevtl by Jsmet Hilton A Mervya LeRoy Production
sentative In the Antilles who re
mains subscrvlont to or main
tains contact with the Vichy
regime.
No Binding Talks
"In tho circumstances the gov
ernment of the United States
does not consider affective or
binding any infnrnuil under
standing with re.ipout to the
Fronch Antilles based upon past
discussions and conditions, nor
does It consider Hint those dls
eunsioni can serve as a basis for
either present or future rela
Hons with the French Antilles."
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued From Page One)
President Roosevelt ciuno down
to this putch himself and told
these men to go back to work
without an agreement they'd
tell him: 'Go back to John L,
Lewis and get an order FROM
HIM. Then we'll go back to
work." "
JET'S wait and see what hap
pens tomorrow, when FDR's
ultimatum expires.
Public opinion is a powerful
weupon. The President has It
on his sldo In this threatened
coal strike.
John L. HASN'T.
THE coal miners' weekly earn
A ings are rather low as present
war wages go running not
much in excess of $40 a week.
But they're working only five
seven-hour days, or a 35-hour
basic work week. It's pretty
hard to earn war wages on such
short hours.
The 35-hour work week is de
signed to SPREAD WOIIK in
periods of depression not for
the all-out production mudc
necessary by war needs.
THE sport world Is all twittered
derby. Which is doubtless as It
should be. Going around with
long facet doesn't necessarily
win wars.
Still, one wonders how he
would feel about all this dorby
hullaballoo at home If ha were
down In the South Seas as a part
of our inadequate forces who
am holding their fingers In tho
dike trying to keep back the Jap
flood.
A major change expected In
trucks is a lighter engine with
greater horsepower In propor
tion to weight as compared to
present engines.
Hans Norland, Auto Insur
ance. .
FAYE u PAYNE -
m miuiuiim hh mi m mi
STARTS SATURDAY MIDNIGHT
maw
r j r i,
t,.;J.m-lv.;, , llii"'.'i'.-.t.faU?, .
On of the moat unusual and poignant love stories ever told
of girl who found love, lost it and found it again . . . and
thell-shocked haro who drifted into romantio adventure
of infinite beauty and tenderness! A New Triumph Prom
Metro-Gold wyn-Mayer I
E
Residents of Shasta way hire
clmiliitcd n petition to the coun
ty court urging Immedate action
toward improvement of that
street.
The petition wai signed by
121 persons in tour hours, ac
cording to II. C. Harris, 435
Shasta way.
Members of the county court
said Friday that the county road
department Is filling chuckholea
on Shnatn way and AHamont
drive with gravel, In an effort to
roltevo tho situation on those
streets.
They said they hope anothar
oil coul with additional gravel
may bo sprcud on the two streets
later In the year, but this de
pends on the availability of oil.
Postoffice Finds
Bomb Addressed to
Father Coughlin Q
NUTLEY, N. J April 30 (VP)
Postoffice employes found In the
mulls today what an official da- ,
scribed as "a good bomb" ad
dressed to tho Rev. Chorion E.
Coughlin at Royal Oak, Mich.
Father Coughlin Is the nation
ally known priest of the Royal
Oak parish's "Shrine of the Lit
tlo Flower." Ho was last In the
news about a year ago, when
postal authorities suspended
mailing privileges of his maga
zine, "Social Justice," on the
ground It contained subversive
statements.
Roosevelt Signs
Appropriation
For Land Army
WASHINGTON. April 30 (Pj
President Roosevelt signed today Q
Irglsltitlon appropriating 126.
100,000 to flnnnco a land army to .
meet farm labor shortngra In
various parts of tho country.
The Inbor will be recruited
and assigned largely by state 1
and federal extension services.
The amount appropriated was
a reduction of approximately
$39,000,000 from budget tl- '
mates.
Thomas Jefferson, after ob
serving the custom In Europe,
Introduced finger bowls Into
America.
Always road tho classified ads.
OAKIE BAKi
Novelty
Cartoon
in Hum in jiii nn iii PMniwuintjay n
Buy War Bonds!
uaiiniiiinnnm